Ben Bernanke, Federal Reserve, half a point interest rate cut, interest rate cut
Ben Bernanke, Federal Reserve, half a point interest rate cut, interest rate cut

Fed Cuts Rates Boldly; Wall Street Wary

JEANNINE AVERSA | January 30, 2008 05:33 PM EST | AP

Compare other versions »

stumbleupon :Fed Cuts Rates Boldly; Wall Street Wary   digg: Fed Cuts Rates Boldly; Wall Street Wary   reddit: Fed Cuts Rates Boldly; Wall Street Wary   del.icio.us: Fed Cuts Rates Boldly; Wall Street Wary

WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve delivered powerful new relief to people and businesses squeezed by the ailing economy Wednesday, cutting interest rates ever deeper in an effort to avert or at least soften the blow of a recession.

The bold, half-point reduction approved by Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and all but one of his colleagues came as President Bush and Congress raced to enact a separate rescue package _ including tax rebates for individuals and tax breaks for companies _ to help energize an economy in danger of stalling.

Heartened by the Fed's newfound aggressiveness, Wall Street rallied but then pulled back, still wary. The Dow Jones industrials jumped more than 200 points after the announcement but ended up down 37.47.

Commercial banks followed the Fed action by lowering their prime lending rate by the same half percentage point _ to 6 percent, the lowest in nearly three years. That prime rate applies to certain credit cards, home equity lines of credit and other loans.

Hours before the Fed's action, the government reported that the nation's economic growth had stumbled to a virtual halt. The economy grew at just a 0.6 percent pace from October through December, and for all of 2007 it logged its weakest performance in five years.

The collapse of the housing market, sour mortgage investments and much harder-to-get credit are weighing on people and businesses alike. Foreclosures have hit record highs, and banks have racked up multibillion-dollar losses. The fallout has shaken Wall Street, catapulted the economy to Topic A among worried families and galvanized political figures, including those vying to be the next president.

"The economy is hanging by a thread," said Stuart Hoffman, chief economist at PNC Financial Services Group.

While Wednesday's interest rate cut was welcome, the Fed's blunt new assessment of the economy was sobering for everyone from business owners to people worried about debts to anyone without a job _ or fearful of losing one.

"Credit has tightened further for some businesses and households," the Fed said. "Moreover, recent information indicates a deepening of the housing contraction as well as some softening in labor markets."

In its 9-1 decision, the Federal Reserve dropped its key rate to 3 percent at the end of a two-day meeting. Richard Fisher, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas was the sole dissenter. He preferred no change.

It was the second Fed rate cut in just over a week, and the policymakers signaled they were prepared to keep going lower if needed.

There had been a rare, three-quarter point reduction last Tuesday. Bernanke had convened an emergency session after stocks worldwide plummeted, intensifying recession fears. The cuts have helped to restore some confidence among skittish investors, but financial markets remain fragile.

In the gravest challenge to his leadership since becoming Fed chief nearly two years ago, Bernanke must help stem the fallout from both the housing bust and a credit crunch. Wall Street critics and others have taken Bernanke to task for waiting until September of last year to embark on a rate-cutting campaign, accusing the Fed chief of being behind the curve in dealing with the economy's problems.

Bernanke also must be mindful of not letting inflation get out of hand _ a delicate and tricky maneuver. Oil prices have receded from $100 a barrel but still remain high. The Fed said it expects inflation to ease in coming quarters but added that it is imperative to monitor developments carefully.

Still, more rate cuts are expected at the Fed's next scheduled meeting in March and beyond. Some economists predict the key rate could drop as low as 2 percent this year, which would be the lowest in four years.

"The Fed needs to throw out a life raft to the economy pending the fiscal stimulus measures," said Brian Bethune, economist at Global Insight.

Even further action might not avert a recession but rather limit the damage. The interest rate cuts will take months to affect the economy, as will any stimulus package approved by the government. Neither effort will quickly cure the root cause of the economy's troubles: a severely depressed housing market and bad mortgage investments.

The economy may actually be declining now. Under one rough rule, it would have to contract for six months in a row for the country to be considered in a recession. The likelihood of a recession has risen sharply over the past year, and analysts increasingly believe the U.S. will be in one during the first half of 2008. The worry is that people and businesses _ which turned more cautious at the end of the year _ will hunker down, sending the economy into a tailspin.

Bernanke is not expected to cut rates as deeply as did his predecessor, Alan Greenspan, when Greenspan took on the 2001 recession, the economic fallout of the Sept. 11 attacks, a series of accounting scandals that rocked Wall Street and the uncertainty that gripped the country leading up to the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in March 2003.

By the summer of 2003, Greenspan had slashed rates to 1 percent, a 45-year low. He held rates there for a year before the Fed began pushing them back up.

Critics contend those low rates helped feed a housing frenzy, in which home values zoomed and investors gobbled up risky loans, known as subprime mortgages, to borrowers with poor credit histories. When the housing market collapsed, the greatest damage was in subprime loans. Banks and other financial institutions have taken big hits on these soured mortgage investments.

____

On the Net:

Federal Reserve: http://www.federalreserve.gov/

Comments for this post are now closed


 
Comments
160
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: 1 2 3 4 5 Next › Last » (5 pages total)
photo

Fed Cuts Rates Boldly; Wall Street Wary

Investors Boldly Reject Fed Move; Bernanke Perplexed

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:42 AM on 01/31/2008

THE SUPPLY-SIDE SCAM

George Bush"s $3 trillion dollar tax giveaway to the rich over the past 7 years has been a disaster for average Americans. Supply-side (trickle-down) economics is a bogus theory promoted by those who benefit from it. In a mature capitalist system, supply side never rules, it"s always the demand side of the equation that governs growth and well-being. Think about the 1930s Depression, General Motors had plenty of supply, but demand evaporated.

Past U.S. economic downturns have been cured with only $200-300 billion in tax cuts targeted to the middle class, because the consumer (the great middle class and 2/3rds of the economy) spends that tax cut and primes the economic pump. But over 7 years Bush has raised the debt that our children and grandchildren will pay from $6 trillion to over $9 trillion for current economic growth (i.e. we all get trickled on, as the rich spend some small fraction of their gains). Unfortunately, this growth is largely and uniquely without wage gains, and so has shrunk the middle class that makes America strong and great. Also, this growth has already over ($3 trillion flushed down the toilet and gone!), as the FED has had to cut interest rates because recession is looming. Massive debt has led to a weak dollar, which is now at record lows vs. other major currencies because of FED interest rate cuts. In turn, the record low dollar has produced record oil prices ($100/barrel); and any additional needed FED interest rate cuts could cause a free fall in the value of the dollar, guaranteeing recession or worse, stagflation.

The middle class is slowly being tapped out, as home values (most of their net worth and the credit card of last resort) are falling in price, and a considerable number of homeowners are heading for foreclosure. With the rich-poor divide increasing, we"re headed toward previous shining examples of trickle-down economics: South America of the recent past and feudalism in the Middle Ages. SUPPY-SIDE ECONOMICS IS NEW FEUDALISM AND SERFDOM!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:58 AM on 01/31/2008

We have an economy based on "wants", not "needs". Business models are based on continuous, unlimited growth and consumption, impossible in a world of finite resources. The "stimulus" is just more of the same crap that got us into this mess. The fact that our political and business leaders espouse these measures and tout themselves as experts is laughable, but unfunny in the extreme.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:28 AM on 01/31/2008
- joja I'm a Fan of joja permalink

This is what happens when banks are allowed to run things. Sheeeeeeesch!!

Wait a minute!! The last time we had a financial meltdown like this was in the 1980s and the S&L mess, right? And the Republicans were in charge.

And now, we have another massive taxpayer bail-out of the banks -- and the Republicans are in charge. Seems like everytime the banks need to kickstart their corrupt industry, the Republicans are there to help them out.

Hmmmmmm, Watson, something's amiss!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:18 AM on 01/31/2008

Yaaay, new math to the rescue...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:51 AM on 01/31/2008
photo

If my spouse spent every cent that we can possibly make for the next ten years on soda pop, I would give them another credit card.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:38 PM on 01/30/2008

"Fed To The Rescue, Cuts Key Rate By Half Point"

How did Gold & Silver react to this act of genius?

Oh.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:53 PM on 01/30/2008

We have all been told that a quarter-point change in this Magic Number by The (tah-DAAH!) FED ...

... is a magical elixir.

Ahem.

It isn't.

So, why don't we all just save each other some time, and stop looking for magical elixirs? Obviously we are all being thrashed-around by a serious problem of our own making, and we're all going to have to figure out a way to fix it.

"Swish! Flick!" isn't going to be that answer.

So, why don't we all just stop ... pretending?

We have WORK to do.

Let's do it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:54 PM on 01/30/2008
photo

Will Ben Bernanke boldly break the greenback with another cut to zero.

Or is zero the last of Ben Bernanke.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:32 PM on 01/30/2008

Once again they are trying to fix the economy with more of what hurt it in the first place: cheap/easy credit!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:48 PM on 01/30/2008
photo

Once again they are trying to fix the economy with more of what hurt it in the first place: cheap/easy credit!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:38 PM on 01/30/2008
photo

ONCE AGAIN THEY ARE FIXING THE ECONOMY WITH MORE OF WHAT HURT IT IN THE FIRST PLACE: CHEAP/EASY CREDIT.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:31 PM on 01/30/2008

I can't believe all this anger at the Fed for what was a perfectly reasonable policy adjustment. The Fed clearly sees demand slowing, with the proper adjustment being to ease policy. Granted, the this was probably the quickest 125bps of easing since the 1980s, but the risks to the overall economy are mounting. Financial markets are in turmoil (not so much stocks - the credit markets are in the worst shape in pretty much every market participant's memory). The leveraged loan market for large corporate deals is pretty much broken. All sorts of LBOs and general refinancings are falling through, or only being syndicated at huge discounts with large paper losses to the agent bank. I will admit that the (mostly former) CEOs of many of the financial companies are making out like bandits, and that's morally atrocious. Something should probably be done about CEOs running their companies into the ground, and getting kicked to the curb (or hey, maybe being moved to chairman of the board) with millions in cash. Maybe a special tax on 95% of on all income greater than $50,000 if you've been ousted for bad performance?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:28 PM on 01/30/2008
photo

ONCE AGAIN THEY WANT TO FIX THE ECONOMY WITH MORE OF WHAT HURT IT IN THE FIRST PLACE: CHEAP/EASY CREDIT!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:25 PM on 01/30/2008

Wall Street Cries To Big Mommy Gummit: Please lower interest rates again, sniff, sniff.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:00 PM on 01/30/2008
Page: 1 2 3 4 5 Next › Last » (5 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

You must be logged in to reply to this comment. Log in  or  Connect